HomeWorldIslamabad’s worst nightmare unfolds: How TTP is fighting to transform Pakistan into Taliban-style Islamic state

Islamabad’s worst nightmare unfolds: How TTP is fighting to transform Pakistan into Taliban-style Islamic state

The TTP’s call for a Sharia-based caliphate has not only undermined Pakistan’s internal stability but also exposed its hollow claims of being a victim of terrorism when it has long been an architect of the very forces now consuming it.

October 15, 2025 / 18:03 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Pakistan is watching its own creation turn into its worst nightmare. The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), once a loosely managed militant asset in Islamabad’s strategic playbook, has now evolved into a full-fledged insurgency that seeks to overthrow the Pakistani government and replace it with a brutal Islamic emirate modelled after the Taliban regime in Kabul.

With growing coordination between the Afghan Taliban and the TTP, and cross-border attacks killing scores of Pakistani troops, Islamabad faces an existential threat of its own making. The very ideology it once exported for “strategic depth” in Afghanistan now burns at home, and Pakistan’s denials, bluster, and blame-shifting can no longer hide its loss of control.

Story continues below Advertisement

Latest developments

Fighting escalated sharply after explosions in Kabul and Paktika prompted Afghan authorities to accuse Pakistan of carrying out strikes on Afghan soil. Islamabad denied or refused to confirm involvement, while Kabul vowed to retaliate. Intense clashes erupted across several stretches of the border over the weekend and continued on the intervening night of October 14–15. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Pakistani forces attacked Spin Boldak in Kandahar, forcing Afghan troops to respond. He claimed Afghan forces killed “several Pakistani aggressor soldiers,” captured multiple posts, and seized weapons, including tanks. Mujahid also alleged that “more than 12 civilians were martyred and over 100 injured” in Pakistani attacks. Pakistan dismissed those accusations, saying it had repelled Taliban assaults, suffered some casualties, and inflicted heavy losses on the Afghan side. Border crossings at Chaman and Torkham have been closed as tensions remain high.